This is The Morning Shift, our one-stop daily roundup of all the auto news that's actually important — all in one place every weekday morning. Or, you could spend all day waiting for other sites to parse it out to you one story at a time. Isn't your time more important?

1st Gear: Let's Give It A Few Years
The Ram Ram 1500 is getting a "light" update in 2017 and it's not going to suddenly have a ton of aluminium. In fact, Chrysler may not switch to aluminum trucks until after a 2020 full redesign... if even then reports Reuters:

Shipments of automotive aluminum may climb to as much as 25 percent of total sales by 2020 from the current 9 percent of 3 million metric tons, Novelis Vice Chairman Debnarayan Bhattacharya said today in an interview in Mumbai.

The share of beverage cans, which are less profitable, will fall to 50 percent from about 60 percent.

A4s are way sexier than Coke cans. Well, S4s at least.

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3rd Gear: Ford Recalled 600 Focus/C-MAX Hybrids Over Steering Gear
The best recall is the one that's issued before the cars get sold to anyone, so good news for prospective Ford Focus/C-MAX Hybrid buyers who didn't end up with one of the 600 cars that didn't get enough ball bearings.

Also, if you were thinking of buying a Ford Focus Hybrid just buy an EcoBoost Mustang instead. Just to be safe.

4th Gear: Then They Come For The Lawyers
There's been some back-and-forth as to how much executives at GM knew and when the knew it, but many people seem to be of the opinion that the legal team knew enough to at least possibly be held liable for a coverup. At least, that's what federal investigators seem to be looking into.

Federal prosecutors are looking at the role employees inside and outside of General Motors'…
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I mean, if someone has to take the blame, why not the lawyers?

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The review of current and former employees is part of a larger criminal investigation into possibly misleading statements the company made to regulators about a faulty ignition switch used in 2.6 million Cobalt and other small cars. The probe covers matters stretching back a decade and is being conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the U.S. attorney's office in Manhattan, said the people familiar with the matter.

Prosecutors are under pressure from lawmakers to hold executives at GM responsible for the long-running product defect, which the auto maker has linked to 54 accidents and at least 13 deaths.

Fun times at GM continue.

5th Gear: Why Mary Barra Is The Exception, Not The Rule
An interesting Bloomberg report finds that, while women are getting into the floor of companies, they're in positions like legal or HR that rarely lead to the CEO job.

The only way to get more female CEOs is to get a conscious effort within corporations to spot future leaders early in their careers and push them toward operational jobs, according to labor experts. Boards also need to be more aware and pro-active: They need to groom more female presidents, chief operating officers and heads of units who will, in turn, become role models for the next generation.

In other words, more Mary Barras. An engineer by training, the 52-year-old spent more than 30 years at Detroit-based GM, which entrusted her with increasing responsibilities, including plant manager and vice president of manufacturing engineering.

Seems right to me.

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Reverse: If Only Lincoln Had A French Car

On August 22, 1962, President Charles De Gaulle of France survives one of several assassination attempts against him thanks to the superior performance of the presidential automobile: The sleek, aerodynamic Citroen DS 19, known as "La Deesse" (The Goddess).